• CIPWTTKT&GC V0x2A v40 - Windows 10 and Chill
    5,002 replies, posted
[QUOTE=scratch (nl);50730816][IMG]https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/43645231/ShareX/Defraggler64_2016-07-18_09-22-45.png[/IMG] HDD uptime comparison time?[/QUOTE] [img]https://i.imgur.com/J6kgAIv.png[/img]
[QUOTE=scratch (nl);50730816][IMG]https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/43645231/ShareX/Defraggler64_2016-07-18_09-22-45.png[/IMG] HDD uptime comparison time?[/QUOTE] [img]http://imgkk.com/i/s0i1.png[/img] 1TB Spinpoint F3 I bought in 2010. It's been on 5 years of the 6 I've owned it :v:
you absolute madmen
[QUOTE=Dr. Evilcop;50730877]you absolute madmen[/QUOTE] [code] Model Family: Western Digital Caviar SE Serial ATA Device Model: WDC WD3200JS-22PDB0 User Capacity: 320,071,851,520 bytes [320 GB] 4 Start_Stop_Count 0x0032 095 095 000 Old_age Always - 5076 9 Power_On_Hours 0x0032 049 049 000 Old_age Always - 37372 [/code] 1557 days [editline]18th July 2016[/editline] Found one even older, 1586 days: [code] Model Family: Hitachi Deskstar T7K500 Device Model: Hitachi HDT725050VLA360 User Capacity: 500,106,780,160 bytes [500 GB] 4 Start_Stop_Count 0x0012 100 100 000 Old_age Always - 2046 5 Reallocated_Sector_Ct 0x0033 001 001 005 Pre-fail Always FAILING_NOW 1887 9 Power_On_Hours 0x0012 095 095 000 Old_age Always - 38087 [/code] But failing SMART
14407 hours SSD, 7606 hours 4TB HDD, 21869 hours old 1TB Seagate that won't die.
[QUOTE=Sam Za Nemesis;50729976]I'd buy all stock if I could but I can't afford a single one with how rare they are[/QUOTE] how about a regular n900? :smug:
[QUOTE=Demache;50727887]I made a powershell script for this. C:\Fraps is just a test, you can change it to whatever. [code]$workingdirectory = "c:\Fraps" #directory to compress $filelist = Get-ChildItem $workingdirectory #list files in directory $7zip = 'C:\Program Files\7-Zip\7z.exe' #7z executable foreach ($file in $filelist) #loop for each file { $archivename = $file.Name + '.bz2' #create archive name & cd $workingdirectory #switch to directory to compress $AllArgs = @('a', '-tbzip2', $archivename, $file.FullName) #create arguments for command & $7zip $AllArgs #run 7zip command }[/code][/QUOTE] It does the trick, but where can I set up for it to work recursively from the selected working directory? I've got a lot more files in subdirectories which I need to have compressed too.
So no mails are going out and coming in. Mail server must be full, oh well. Oh what's this, I have to make a backup? Okay. Mailbox is 6GB and I am using currently ExMerge which has a limit of 2GB. So now I have to be ready to kill the program before it's gonna fuck everything over and cut it into 3 pieces. It might be easier to do this straight through Outlook though.
what are some legit use cases for a Pixel C? I can't think of any personally, seems pretty limited. I'd rather buy a full blown Windows tablet myself as my Android phone can most likely already do everything a Android tablet can do, just with a smaller screen
[QUOTE=Squarebob;50730873][img]http://imgkk.com/i/s0i1.png[/img] 1TB Spinpoint F3 I bought in 2010. It's been on 5 years of the 6 I've owned it :v:[/QUOTE] [img]http://i.imgur.com/9b3mZRZ.png[/img]
So the buyer paid now, looks like he's basically a reseller or a parts dealer. TC Systems. [url]http://stores.tcsystemsonline.com/about-us/[/url]
[QUOTE=Brt5470;50731466]So the buyer paid now, looks like he's basically a reseller or a parts dealer. TC Systems. [url]http://stores.tcsystemsonline.com/about-us/[/url][/QUOTE] Watch as they sell it back to some company for $3000, then the cycle continues :v:
[QUOTE=kaze4159;50731489]Watch as they sell it back to some company for $3000, then the cycle continues :v:[/QUOTE] Well seems they sell them and service and warranty and such. I can't do that so it's fine to me. Will try to ship it today, though I think I told ebay I'd need one business day.
[QUOTE=nikomo;50731438][img]http://i.imgur.com/9b3mZRZ.png[/img][/QUOTE] [img]http://i.imgur.com/xFwHR0d.png[/img] :cool: [editline]18th July 2016[/editline] Also [t]http://i.imgur.com/CRQmqrl.png[/t] Fuuuuuck please I thought I had one of the good ones fucking ST3000DM-001 :hairpull:
...and microsoft [I]still[/I] hasn't fixed sysprep for windows 10 even after like a year, no wonder nobody wants to use this shit
[QUOTE=Giraffen93;50731534]...and microsoft [I]still[/I] hasn't fixed sysprep for windows 10 even after like a year, no wonder nobody wants to use this shit[/QUOTE] What's broken about it? I sysprepped users off the SSD and it worked fine.
[QUOTE=Giraffen93;50730983]how about a regular n900? :smug:[/QUOTE] Except an n950 is actually a fairly modern phone. [editline]18th July 2016[/editline] Hell I'd actually buy an n950 if they were available for a reasonable price.
[QUOTE=helifreak;50731564]What's broken about it? I sysprepped users off the SSD and it worked fine.[/QUOTE] earlier it just came up with some generic error a lot of people have gotten now it couldn't validate the version, apparently because i upgraded windows (but i just installed a clean version of 10, microsoft does some stupid shit) i just can't deal with all this shit, they make it harder every release and this has to be done in august, sysprepping takes fucking forever and it can't be updated afterwards
[QUOTE=Sam Za Nemesis;50731776]Maybe if it didn't take over a minute to open OpenOffice vs seconds in the N950, more than 1/4GB of RAM, and had the best UX on the planet[/QUOTE] it's a shame the specs died so quickly, there will never be a mainstream phone as good as that one, keyboard and open os is amazing
[QUOTE=kaze4159;50731489]Watch as they sell it back to some company for $3000, then the cycle continues :v:[/QUOTE] I've run into that before. I was selling Qbus SCSI cards for $75 each on one of the vintage computer forums and one guy came in and bought my entire lot for $800. Turns out he was a reseller who promptly turned around and flipped them all for $200-$400 each. Slimy piece of shit. These cards were for the other DEC users, not for reselling. Ever since then I've screened buyers of my shit to keep the obvious resellers and flippers looking for a reason to exist.
I was watching a tour of the Surface labs with Panos Panay, and try and look at his wrist at ~8:46: [video]https://youtu.be/_G8CZQlBWkE[/video] Looks like it's a Band 3 or something, at least he covers it up immediately afterwards.
[QUOTE=pentium;50732321]I've run into that before. I was selling Qbus SCSI cards for $75 each on one of the vintage computer forums and one guy came in and bought my entire lot for $800. Turns out he was a reseller who promptly turned around and flipped them all for $200-$400 each. Slimy piece of shit. These cards were for the other DEC users, not for reselling. Ever since then I've screened buyers of my shit to keep the obvious resellers and flippers looking for a reason to exist.[/QUOTE] I'll admit I'm one of those people who flips things from ebay. It's really hard not to when you can pick up a radio for $80 and immediately turn it around for $200 with a polish and an alignment. People are always so afraid of untested items.
[QUOTE=papkee;50732372]I'll admit I'm one of those people who flips things from ebay. It's really hard not to when you can pick up a radio for $80 and immediately turn it around for $200 with a polish and an alignment. People are always so afraid of untested items.[/QUOTE] Rare parts and neglected equipment are different ballparks, especially if you both calibrate them, verify they work 100% and clean them.
It might be part of the reason I get so salty in the Thrift shopping thread. :v:
[QUOTE=Merijnwitje;50731071]It does the trick, but where can I set up for it to work recursively from the selected working directory? I've got a lot more files in subdirectories which I need to have compressed too.[/QUOTE] Assuming you want the .bz2's to stay in the directory the files were originally in, I added -Recurse and changed the archive name to include the full destination path. [code]$workingdirectory = "c:\Fraps" #directory to compress $filelist = Get-ChildItem -Recurse $workingdirectory #list files in directory $7zip = 'C:\Program Files\7-Zip\7z.exe' #7z executable foreach ($file in $filelist) #loop for each file { $archivename = $file.FullName + '.bz2' #create archive name & cd $workingdirectory #switch to directory to compress $AllArgs = @('a', '-tbzip2', $archivename, $file.FullName) #create arguments for command & $7zip $AllArgs #run 7zip command }[/code] Powershell is hella cool.
note to self: never buy $40 motherboards the frigging thing throttles on stock clocks and stock voltages since the VRMs overheat so bad (aluminum stepper driver heatsinks helped though)
[QUOTE=fishyfish777;50734501]note to self: never buy $40 motherboards the frigging thing throttles on stock clocks and stock voltages since the VRMs overheat so bad (aluminum stepper driver heatsinks helped though)[/QUOTE] Try ghetto strapping a fan on the heatsinks?
[QUOTE=B!N4RY;50734576]Try ghetto strapping a fan on the heatsinks?[/QUOTE] Many mobo's that cheap don't even have heatsinks for the VRM's. Personal experience.
[QUOTE=fishyfish777;50734501]note to self: never buy $40 motherboards the frigging thing throttles on stock clocks and stock voltages since the VRMs overheat so bad (aluminum stepper driver heatsinks helped though)[/QUOTE] God that's terrible. Most good motherboards don't even need heatsinks on the VRMs and such. Thermal testing on fairly high overclocks show that quality ones don't even get dangerously hot completely bare.
[QUOTE=nikomo;50731438][img]http://i.imgur.com/9b3mZRZ.png[/img][/QUOTE] [IMG]http://i.imgur.com/chCip4G.png[/IMG]
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